Laszlo Zsolt Nagy wrote:
My problem is about properties and the virtuality of the methods. I
would like to create a property whose get and set methods
are virtual.
You might find the following function useful, which I
developed for use in PyGUI.
def overridable_property(name, doc = None):
""
Diez B. Roggisch:
> On second thoughts, a metaclass _might_ help here - but it would be
rather
> elaborate: look in the baseclasses for properties that have getters
and
> setters of the same name as some methods in the current class, and
replace
> them, or create a new property with them (I'm not
Laszlo Zsolt Nagy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:<[EMAIL
PROTECTED]>...
> My problem is about properties and the virtuality of the methods. I
> would like to create a property whose get and set methods
> are virtual. I had the same problems in Delphi before and the solution
> was the
"harold fellermann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> I asked this question some time ago, but as I got no answer, so I just
> try it a second time.
This did get out, but I can't answer except to suggest looking at code for
other C extension modules. Nested (inner)
Hello,
I asked this question some time ago, but as I got no answer, so I just
try it a second
time.
I am working on a C extension module that implements a bunch of
classes. Everything
works fine so far, but I cannot find any way to implement class
attributes or inner
classes. Consider you have
Steven Bethard wrote:
Laszlo Zsolt Nagy wrote:
My problem is about properties and the virtuality of the methods. I
would like to create a property whose get and set methods
are virtual.
Perhaps you want to roll your own VirtualProperty descriptor? Here's
one based off the property implementation
Laszlo Zsolt Nagy wrote:
My problem is about properties and the virtuality of the methods. I
would like to create a property whose get and set methods
are virtual.
Perhaps you want to roll your own VirtualProperty descriptor? Here's
one based off the property implementation in Raymond Hettinger'
I think you may find Alex Martelli's PyCon slides somewhere
on the net. The black magic slides discuss this issue. But I
think the fix he suggests is not dissimilar from what you
are already doing. I don't remember exactly now, but
it is always worth a look.
Michele Simionato
--
http:
> Great. I'll think about this and decide which is better - lamba or
> private functions. Lambda seems much
> shorter but it is not as clear why it is there. :-)
I did put comments above each property line - so one might argue that's
about the same effort as writing the method explicit. Alternativ
I'm not aware of possibility that works as you first expected. You yourself
explained why.
But _maybe_ you can use lambda here - that creates the layer of indirection
one needs.
foo = property(lambda self: self.get_foo(), lamda self,v: self.set_foo(v))
Great. I'll think about this and decide w
> I cannot override C2._getname instead, because c2.name would print
> 'Test2" instead of lala. Clearly, the property stores a reference to the
> get and set methods and it is not possible to have it use the new
> methods. Creating a new property is the worst - need to duplicate code
> and also C3
My problem is about properties and the virtuality of the methods. I
would like to create a property whose get and set methods
are virtual. I had the same problems in Delphi before and the solution
was the same. I created a private _get method and a public
get method. The former one will call the
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